Common Goldeneyes
December 15th, 2008
Common Goldeneyes are my favorite of all waterfowl. They spend the summer
north of us, but in late fall hundreds of them arrive in Ottawa, and many stay
throughout the winter, staking out patches of open water on the Rideau and
Ottawa Rivers. If necessary, they'll cluster in the rapids when the rest of
the water freezes over. They are amazingly hardy little ducks. These guys can
be seen splashing and having a good time in twenty below, when even the
overwintering Mallards are huddled up on shore hiding their faces from the
wind.
Even the rough water of the Deschenes Rapids is not too much for them. They
dive for food in the waves, all the while getting carried further and further
downstream, until they have to use their wings to regain lost ground. They do
this again and again, for hours. They never seem to run out of stamina.
But the Rideau River is the best place to see them up close in winter, in the
stretch between Queensway (Hurdman) Bridge and Cummings Bridge. To pick them
out among the more familiar Mallards and Blacks, look for smaller ducks who
appear very white--those are the adult males. Up close they're quite handsome.
A young male making do with a narrow stream of open water.
Mallards behind.
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How cold was it?
December 14th, 2008
A few wide-angle photos to set some context for the ones I'm posting tomorrow.
If you look closely at the second picture, you can see a male Common Goldeneye
on the upper left. The ducks on the ice are Mallards.
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A deep-winter Pileated Woodpecker
December 13th, 2008
Went out hiking at 8:30AM this morning. Two hours, -20 degrees Celsius (that's
-4F for my American readers). It was wonderful. The sky was clear blue, the
sun was shining. The Rideau River is gloriously ragged in such weather, like
our own little corner of the arctic. Even the rapids had icebergs and ice
fringes.
A male
Pileated
Woodpecker was the star of the show. For such magnificent and wild-looking
creatures, Pileated Woodpeckers can be remarkably tame. This one was busily
gouging an old wooden pole beside the river. He remained calm while I
approached to within 10 feet, and circled the pole trying different angles.
The only thing that sufficed to startle him was a very noisy mini snow plow
going by. He skittered around to the far side of the pole, but came back a few
seconds later.
And so here he is, with my thanks for being such a good sport!
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Toughing it out
December 11th, 2008
When three Wild Turkeys made an appearance at the Hurdman bird feeders, I
kicked myself for not bringing my camera--then I raced back home on foot as
fast as I could go. When I got back a half hour later, they were still there!
Wild Turkeys were recently reintroduced in Ottawa. We're still waiting to see
whether they can establish a stable breeding population, surviving the worst
that Ottawa winters can throw at them. So far they appear to be doing well.
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Insulation
November 22nd, 2008
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Liquid Light
November 6th, 2008
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Watching the world go by
November 3rd, 2008
Got a few good shots of an American Black Duck resting and preening on the
Rideau River today.
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Posers
October 23rd, 2008
There's nothing like chickadees to make a nature photographer feel like a
million bucks.
They almost seem to be helping you out. "Over here! Me me me! Photograph me.
No wait, the light is all wrong. Let me move over there. Okay, here we go.
Cheese!"
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So I went down to Henry's camera shop today. I learned that there is, in fact,
a lens that does 400mm zoom and is in my price range (just). Yay!
I also learned that, dear god, I need steroids to carry that thing.
Way
too heavy for handheld shooting + my arm strength. Unyay. Since I don't like
the idea of having to lug a tripod everywhere, 70-300mm it is. So I
(re-)bought it and went down to Mud Lake with it this afternoon. Got lots of
distant poor-quality shots of interesting birds (Wood Ducks, Common
Goldeneyes, Scaup), and several glorious pictures of chickadees.
I have high hopes of what I'll be doing with this lens in the future! Common
Goldeneyes winter in Ottawa by the hundreds. They can sometimes be seen quite
close to shore on the Rideau River rapids (when the rest of the river is
frozen over). In late winter, they start courting, and Common Goldeneye mating
rituals are...quite something.
But today, you get chickadees.
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Ottawa River Sunset
October 14th, 2008
There's a spot by the Ottawa River, a short distance east of Andrew Haydon
Park, that produces the most beautiful sunsets. I had resolved that I would
return there with camera in hand on a promising, mostly cloudy evening, and
fill a memory card. Yesterday evening was such an evening.
As it turned out, the day I picked was smack dab in the middle of fall
waterfowl migration. The long line of specks in the water (more visible at
wallpaper res) is an evening roost of Canada Geese. By the time I was done
shooting, there were literally thousands of them.
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The Joys Of Photographing Kinglets
October 5th, 2008
The birding has been spectacular lately. I've been out at Mud Lake this
weekend enjoying the influx of kinglets, sparrows and thrushes. But I'm not
posting to tell you about birding, per se. The topic is photography. Yesterday
was the day when I finally went out and purchased my spiffy new $600+ zoom
lens. And today was the day when I returned my spiffy $600+ zoom lens.
I took it out to Mud Lake yesterday afternoon and shot everything I could over
a space of four hours. And in the process I learned a few things.
- 300mm is not enough zoom.
- When shooting small birds in thick foliage, autofocus is worse than
useless.
- VR (vibration reduction) works surprisingly well.
- The sun will be where you do not want it to be. Always.
- I now understand why I get borderline-hostile stares from some nature
photographers. It's because nature photographers secretly wish everyone else
in the world would CEASE TO EXIST (and thus cease to scare away the damn
wildlife) until they're finished taking the shot.
- Photographing Golden-Crowned Kinglets is an exercise in self-torture.
They were hanging out in bands by the Ottawa River yesterday. I came to Mud
Lake hoping they'd be there, and hoping to shoot them. (In the figurative
sense, of course. Although by the time I was done, possibly in the literal
sense.) Tiny little birds with vivid saffron yellow crown stripes, they are
out-smalled and out-cuted only by hummingbirds.
The good news about photographing kinglets is that they're very bold--you can
get within six feet of them and they evince no greater alarm than your average
chickadee. The bad news about photographing kinglets is that
they are the
most hyperactive birds in the universe. Now refer back to what I said
about autofocus being useless, and picture me carefully adjusting the focus
wheel to zero in on a bird that moves every .000002 femtoseconds, and you'll
have a good idea of how I spent my afternoon.
I worked, and worked, and worked. And finally was rewarded with this:
...and I'm convinced that the photographers who have taken sharp, in-focus
pictures of Golden-Crowned Kinglets have captured and drugged them.
Anyway, the short story is that I need more skill, and I need more patience,
but I also need more zoom to take the kinds of pictures I want. So I took the
lens back, and I'm going to research the possibility of more focal length, and
frankly, I'm going to seriously consider whether I want to take up the hobby
of bird photography. Maybe I should try something less challenging. Like ice
climbing.
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